GANNON v HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE, NOTE OF APPEAL AGAINST CONVICTION BY [2017] ScotHC HCJAC_58 (08 August 2017))
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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY
Lord Justice General
Lord Justice Clerk
Lord Menzies
Lord Brodie
Lord Turnbull
OPINION OF THE COURT
[2017] HCJAC 58
HCA/2016/426/XC
delivered by LORD CARLOWAY, the LORD JUSTICE GENERAL
in
NOTE OF APPEAL AGAINST CONVICTION
by
ANTHONY GANNON
Appellant
against
HER MAJESTY’S ADVOCATE
Respondent
Appellant: Graham, Hay; Faculty Appeals Service (for Westcourts Litigation, Greenock)
Respondent: W McVicar (sol adv) AD; the Crown Agent
8 August 2017
[1] This Opinion requires to be read in conjunction with Gubinas v HM Advocate
[2017] HCJAC 59, which was heard at the same time. The case raised a similar point relative to
directions upon the interpretation of CCTV or other video images.
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2
[2] On 25 July 2016, at the sheriff court in Paisley, the appellant was convicted of two
charges. The first was that he assaulted an employee of Farmfoods, Port Glasgow on
30 March 2016, with intent to rob. The second was of having a knife with him at the time;
contrary to section 49(1) of the Criminal Law (Consolidation) (Scotland) Act 1995. He was
sentenced to 4 years on the first charge, and 2 years concurrent on the second, backdated to
31 March 2016.
[3] The evidence came first from MG, the assistant manager at Farmfoods. He had seen
the appellant in the shop on some 5 or 6 previous occasions. On the relevant date, he had
been looking towards the till area when he saw the appellant, whom he identified in court,
with a scarf over his face standing close to the till. He went into the toilet and the alarm bell
went off. He went on to the shop floor where the manager, SC, told him that someone had
pulled a knife on him. SC pointed towards the door. MG saw the appellant running out of
the door. On 6 April, MG identified the appellant at a VIPER parade. He was shown CCTV
images of the events. He recognised the appellant as shown in the images, although the
appellant’s name had only been given to him later by others.
[4] SC gave evidence that he had been at the till, when a man approached and shouted
“open the f...ing till”. He showed him a knife. SC pressed the alarm bell and told the
assailant that he was phoning the police. The assailant had a scarf around his mouth.
Nevertheless, SC knew him and he was able to identify him in court. He had seen him in
the shop around 10 times previously. He had pointed him out to MG as he was leaving the
store. He had identified him to the police later that day from an emulator board containing
some 12 images. This witness was also shown the CCTV images. On 6 April he too had
identified the appellant at a VIPER parade.
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[5] PC MR spoke to arriving at Farmfoods and being given the name of the appellant.
The appellant lived less than half a mile away. The police went to his home. A knife was
recovered from the kitchen area, sitting on a draining board at the sink. The officer was not
able to identify the appellant from the CCTV images. He was able to do so from the clothing
of the person shown and that recovered at the appellant’s house, together with the
appellant’s direction of travel. The knife had the same kind of blue coloured handle as
shown in the images. PC SM gave evidence about attending at the appellant’s flat after the
incident and recovering the knife.
[6] In his charge to the jury, the sheriff referred to the CCTV images. He described them
as part of the evidence in the case. He continued:
“The thing to remember is this: you’re here as judges not witnesses. You form a
judgement about what the disc shows just as you form a judgement about the eye-
witnesses’ descriptions of what happened in Farmfoods.
Just because you’ve seen a record of the events made on disc ... doesn’t mean
that you become a witness to these events yourselves. You have to stand apart from
these events and form your own conclusions about the disc, the CCTV evidence
we’ve seen played on disc.
Witnesses have told you about the disc showing what it shows concerning
the commission of the crime. You have to decide if the witnesses’ interpretation of
what the disc shows is correct. You have to decide what the CCTV shows and if it
supports proof of the crime charged. You can take account of what it has been said it
shows but you are not bound by the views you have heard. So at the end of the day
you judge the CCTV evidence just as you judge all the other witnesses you heard in
this case”.
[7] After the jury had retired, they returned to ask whether they could see the CCTV
images of the assailant “showing the knife in close up”. The sheriff, having consulted
parties, told the jury that there was no closer image than the size of that shown to them
previously. The jury wanted to see, in particular, “the blue bit”; presumably the knife. The
video was then played and stopped at an appropriate point. The jury were permitted to
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leave the jury box and to approach the screen for the purposes of obtaining a closer view.
They then retired again before returning a unanimous guilty verdict.
[8] The ground of appeal was that the sheriff had erred in not giving the jury an
additional direction about how to treat the video images. He had failed to direct them that
the evidential weight to be attached to them could only be to support or undermine the
testimony of the witnesses and not as “stand alone evidence”. In submissions, however,
there was no criticism of the sheriff’s directions as a generality. Rather, the complaint came
to be that he ought to have re-directed the jury, following upon their question, to ensure that
their purpose was only one of testing the account given “by the footage, and not to attempt
to reconcile themselves as to what is demonstrated”. The actions of the jury suggested that
they had adopted an investigatory role, despite having been told not to do this.
[9] The Crown’s Case and Argument had been that the jury had to be guided by
evidence from witnesses (Steele, Donnelly). Identification of the appellant, by reference to the
video images, had not been a live issue in this case. The jury were properly allowed to make
up their own minds about what the video images showed. The images had been played
again in the presence of the appellant and under control of the court. There was no objection
to this. No additional directions were sought or required.
[10] The court is satisfied that there was no need for the sheriff to repeat what he had
already said to the jury about the video images. The jury did not ask for further directions.
All they wanted to do was to review a particular part of the video recording. They were
permitted to do that without objection. In any event, for the reasons in Gubinas v HM
Advocate (supra), the court is satisfied that there was no material misdirection.
[11] The appeal is accordingly refused.
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